Too Busy Thinking About My Baby - Al Kooper

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Too Busy Thinking About My Baby Lyrics

Bradford-Strong-Whitfield

Oh listen to me people

I ain't got time to think about money
Or what it could buy
And I ain't got time to sit down and wonder
What makes a birdie fly
And I don't have the time to think about
What makes the flower grow
And I've never given a second thought
to where the rivers flow

Too busy thinking about my baby yeah
And I ain't got time for nothing else

I ain't got time to discuss the weather
And how long it's gonna last
I ain't got time to do no studies
Once I get out of class
Telling you I'm just a girl,
Saying I got a one track mind

When it comes to thinking about anything but my baby
I just don't have the time

Too busy thinking about my baby yeah
And I ain't got time for nothing else
Too busy thinking about my baby yeah
And I ain't got time for nothing else

All the diamonds and pearls in the world
Could never match your worth, no, no
He's some kind of wonderful
People I tell ya
I got a heaven right here on earth
I'm just a guy
With a one, one track mind
When it comes to thinking about anything but my baby
I just don't got the time

Too busy thinking about my baby yeah
And I ain't got time for nothing else
Too busy thinking about my baby yeah
And I ain't got time for nothing else

Too busy thinking about my baby
Ain't got time for nothing else, no, no, no
Too busy thinking about my baby
Ain't got time for nothing else, no, no, no

Lyrics provided by LyricsEver.com
Al Kooper (born Alan Peter Kuperschmidt February 5, 1944, Brooklyn, New York) is an American songwriter, producer and musician, probably best known for organizing the group Blood, Sweat & Tears, though he didn't stay with the group long enough to share its popularity.

His first musical success was as a 14-year-old guitarist in the Royal Teens, best known for their novelty blues riff, "Short Shorts". In 1960, he joined the song-writing team of Bob Brass and Irwin Levine, who wrote the hit, "This Diamond Ring", for Gary Lewis and the Playboys. When he was 21, he moved to Greenwich Village.

He performed with Bob Dylan in concert in 1965 and in the studio in 1965 and 1966, including playing Hammond organ with Dylan at the (in)famous Newport Folk Festival of 1965. He worked extensively with Mike Bloomfield for a number of years after the two met as studio musicians on Dylan's legendary Highway 61 Revisited album.

In 1965, he co-formed The Blues Project and played their most famous gig at the Monterey Pop Festival in 1967. He formed Blood, Sweat & Tears in the same year, leaving after the group's first album, Child is Father to the Man, in 1968.

Kooper played on hundreds of records, including The Rolling Stones, B.B. King, The Who and Cream. On occasion, he has even overdubbed on his own efforts, as on The Live Adventures Of Mike Bloomfield and Al Kooper album, as Roosevelt Gook. He discovered the band Lynyrd Skynyrd, and produced their first three albums, including the single Sweet Home Alabama. Kooper also wrote the score for the TV series, Crime Story, and has also written music for several made-for-television movies. Kooper also produced a now rare album by a group called Appaloosa.

Al Kooper has published a memoir, Backstage Passes: Rock 'n' Roll Life In The Sixties (1977), now available in revised form as Backstage Passes & Backstabbing Bastards: Memoirs of a Rock 'N' Roll Survivor 2007

Kooper currently teaches songwriting and production at Berklee College of Music in Boston and plays weekend concerts with his band Jimmy Vivino and The ReKooperators. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.

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Al Kooper